Originally posted by Iconoclast
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I certainly doubt, with Mike's track record, that he would have paid a penny he didn't have to, to get Eddie to cough up the 'skip' story for Robert down the boozer. Eddie himself has said on record that he would have had no financial motive while working for Portus & Rhodes for pinching and selling on the diary if he had found it. That only gets us so far, though, because there are several billionaires knocking around who are not above adding to their wealth by immoral or illegal methods.
Eddie didn't hang around in the pub, either, in the forlorn hope that Robert might whip out his wallet and offer him something for his trouble and information. The impression Robert gives me is that Eddie was in a hurry to leave as soon as the tale was told - not sold.
The only way Mike might have been persuaded to part with any dosh was when he got his first substantial royalty cheques, if Eddie had been demanding a cut not to spill the same beans with which he had previously teased Feldman, when he asked what his confession was worth.
It's still a matter of what incentive Eddie would have for telling Robert - a perfect stranger - that odd story of a find he had made in Battlecrease. What better way would he have had to explain away the growing rumours, if he was aware by June 1993 that they were not only true, but concerned the diary being found - and taken away - by him? We know Eddie's name was given to Paul Dodd later in the summer by a worried Arthur Rigby, because that's what Dodd told the police in the October, so it does look likely that Eddie was aware when talking to Robert in the June that people were linking his name with finding the diary in Dodd's house. He must also have been thinking back ruefully to his own loose-lipped conversation with Brian Rawes in July 1992, which Brian also told the police about in October 1993.
That would have been quite an incentive for Eddie to tell the future publisher of the diary a cockandbull story about throwing some worthless old book into a skip. If Brian or Arthur then did their worst, and he got to hear about it, he could use a similar story to say yes, they were right about him finding an old book in that house full of books, but he didn't take it away to sell on and it wasn't Jack the Ripper's diary. If challenged over the skip, he might have had to say it was at a nearby property, but he evidently considered the risk worth taking.
Love,
Caz
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